21 Mar 12 - 11:55 AM (#3326381) Subject: More obscure Canadian mumming From: Desert Dancer One of those funny coincidences: Just a few days ago I posted a link to a nice film of mumming from Newfoundland, and on Facebook today, the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress provided a link to a previously unpublished mummers play found in Newfoundland and Saskatchewan: Three weeks ago, the head of the AFC archive, Michael Taft, retired. In honor of Micheal, we present one of his greatest finds as a folklorist, the "Newfoundland-and-Saskatchewan Squid-and-Bigfoot Mummers Play and Mock Wedding," as performed by the AFC Staff on the occasion of Michael's retirement. The full details can be read here. An excerpt of the opening moments: Cast enters singing "O Canada." After "My home and native land," the singers become increasingly unsure of the words and tune, and eventually fizzle out. Bass-Ackwards. I think this find is a treasure that should not be missed by anyone with interest in mumming traditions, ethnography, or cryptozoology. Or library science. If I'm not mistaken, one of our own Mudcat folk Geeks was involved with this... or is that a folk Nerd? I always have trouble figuring out which of those terms is appropriate. ;-) ~ Becky in Long Beach |
21 Mar 12 - 12:17 PM (#3326405) Subject: RE: More obscure Canadian mumming From: GUEST,olddude Dear Becky Priceless |
21 Mar 12 - 05:10 PM (#3326592) Subject: RE: More obscure Canadian mumming From: Nerd Yes, it is indeed me who organized this performance and played Bigfoot...thanks for posting, Becky! |
22 Mar 12 - 12:09 AM (#3326803) Subject: RE: More obscure Canadian mumming From: Sandy Mc Lean The Cape Breton's Acadian French still cellebrate Mi-Carême which I believe to be closely related to the mumming tradition: Mi-Carême |
22 Mar 12 - 04:36 PM (#3327264) Subject: RE: More obscure Canadian mumming From: Desert Dancer Sandy, it's interesting how that Lenten "Mi-Carême" looks just like the Christmas "mummering" in Newfoundland that I had linked to before. It looks like there's no particular performance or theatrics in either of those, other than individual disguises. (As an aside, I enjoyed visiting Cheticamp on my Cape Breton visit some years back, and Cheticamp Reel is a favorite to play.) Nerd's Washington, DC, production was a wonderful spoof based on the English/British Christmas mumming plays -- but I guess it's also traditional to adapt the details of the play to spoof contemporary issues of one sort or another (an especially local issue in this case: the retirement of one of the folklorists). There's nothing like self-referential folk activities! :-) ~ Becky in Long Beach |